- -l§v~‘C,{‘P-( 5. 1-,, 7- i‘ " 5 . W, PAGE TWO Woman ’s lM-“i ealm A AAAAAALA v Yvvv ‘TEE __'CHARLOTTETOWN _ A AA$%‘jA v ‘a A -.-- Socialwcttrid IF YOU AND I If you “'0lli(i smile a little more And I would kiizdip be; 3 If you would s‘. p in thiizk before You speak of faults you sec; Y‘ l’! I would show more patience, too, With all with whom I'm hurled, ' ‘Then I wsiild help, and so would you To make a bcttci- world. U you would cheer your neighbor more And I'd encourage ni'ne, ~ ff you would linger at his door To say his work is fine, ‘Ind I would stop to help him when His litc in frowns are curled, Both ycu an.l I'd be helping then To make a bcttvi" worl-zi. But just as lorg as you keep still And pod your selfsh way, And I lush on and heedlrss kill The kirci wards I could say, Whie you and I refuse to smile And keep our gay flags furled, Someone W11 gi-iiiiibie all the while That it's a gloomy world. DKSAPPROVES 01-‘ CAMBRIDGE BLUE HAIR. In a recent Evgisil County Court case for damages in which a young woman declared that a hairdresser had made her liar “a light Cam- bridge blue" staying so for fohr menths, the Judge siirl: "God gave women beautiful i181!‘ and it. is per- tectly shocking that woman should come to painting hrr ha'r purple or blue or any such atrocities." The hairdressers daughter de- clared that only a blue rinse had _ been used—mixture of washing blue and water. That made the hair chronium blonde, as requested. Arid she thought "it lfoked beauti- W ' . i- i" it. .: I'm! SCRUTULOUS SCRUBBING WTLL ROUT BLACKHEADS Spring blackheads should be routed out with the same persist- ent going-after that the good gar- dener gives weeds. They are qu'te comparable to weeds, as a. main-i or fact. POT, like weeds, get a fmv of them rind let them go and your whole face looks bad. before you know it. Scrupuious scrubbing is the best way to start out nfttr blackheads. Use fairly warm wafer. either a brush or a good kiiiiiaby- irashrag Ind medicated S"Fi|'l. Instead of pincliirc your black- heads hctwrccn fl or prying them Wilil a rice... _ l:'_v scrubbing the eni re nzirfrc v..ih your soap and water, Yo.i‘ll not gct them out the first mnrning or n'ght. But keep after it. ‘Th y are just mres stopped with dzri and the little nily secretions titat have collected in i-hc enlrttgcd pi-rcs. l-‘ree them from tho dirt, then close them up by cold ivaler or an antiseptic that has slirukirg qualities and you'll find it is successful. Use a cream if you have a per- slstout crsc of blackheads. This sc:urs out tfic face but naturally it is hard on it. so us" the softest, ECTS ‘xindlitst cream you have afterward. HOW T0 MAKE WOOLLEN FLOWERS Wool buttcnholes are very defi- nitely "in" again to brighten up our begIuning-to-look-shabby coats, or to adorn our spring suits. with just a little time and pa- tience these may be made for a few cents. Buy inexpensive skelns of wool in the colors to match or con- trast with your outfit, together with one or two shades of green for stalks, and yellow for the flower centres. You will also need a sharp, slender darning needle, a piece of pfable cardboard and a pair of small, sharp scssors. lnve-ln-l-Mlst Blue in deep medium, and pale tones will give you a. charming ef- feet. Place together two strips of cardboard, about 1-4 inch wide and 3 inches long, and bind the wool round and round the width way of cardboard about thirty times. Have prepared the stalk lengths, which are treated as for the other posfes, except that you push the needle be- tween the cardboard atrlps under the notch of wool, bring out on the other sde, and tie very tightly across the top. Slip one blade of your scissors between the cardboard at the other end, and cut through the comiplete notch, the ends of which will spring up and form a fluffy ball. Give about twenty flow- ers to tlrs buttmhcle. The stalks may be made into a cluster with a length of wool, or prettier still, a piece of raffa. Very pretty effects may also be obtained in rainbow wools. Wallflowers Shades of brown, brick red, or- ange, and yellow were used for the flowers in this buttonhole, with a dull green for the stalks. To form the flowers, take a needleful of wool, about l0 inches long, thread into darniug needle and make a fairly large, loose knot at the other end of wool. lifakc five loops, each about 1-4 inch long, by stitching into the knot and fasten" off secure- l)’. Your ten inches of wool will make several small flowers and it is inadvisable to use a longer piece, since the wool so easily tangles in drawing through the knot. Take a ncedleful of yellow wool and sew two small stitches across the cen- tre of cach flower. When you have made, say, sixty blossoms, cut as many '7 inch lengths in green wool, and darn an end through the back of each flower, drawing it through to give a stalk of double wool for 2 inches and single for the remaining 3 in- ehes. (The double piece at the top is necessary to keep the posy firnri Violets I<‘.:iiu the videts in exactly the same way as the wallflowcrs, ex- c"pt that you will need only four lecps, each ore almost 1-2 inch long. Par-ma. and a. deep mauve make a pretty combmatlon, Pack this posy rather more loosely than the first, with about forty blossoms. Taken as Reflectedin Letters to the Column Shows the Mettle of the Pe0ple-Some Have Demonstrated That They Are Pinch-Beck Gold, But Many More Have Proved Themselves Fine and Strong and Courageous The depression has hit the matrimonial market about as hard as it has hit the stock market and with virtually the same results. A few it has enriched. Many it has bankrupt-ed. Others it has scared into be- coming hoarders who are afraid to make any ln- vestment ivhatever, and still others it has driven into reckless wild-cat speculations. I get hundreds of letters every day, written by people who live in different parts of the country and who belong to every grade of society, and these reflect the tempo of the times as nothing else could do, and show how men and women are bearing themselves 1n this crisis through which we are passing. I have tried to analyze these, and the gist of my conclusions is: That is has slowed down both marriage and divorce because it has put them in the luxury class. That it has enormously increased the number of free-love unions be- tween boys and girls. That is has revealed husbands and wives to each other and enabler them to see just how fine and strong, or how yellow are their life partners. That it has turned many a. painted doll into a. real woman, and cured many a phtlanderer of his wanderings. That it has turned myrlads of people away from night clubs and hard drinking and whoopee making back home, and they are glad of it and intend to start there quite a. spell even after prosperity sets in again. Out of these letters I could tell you a thousand stories, fiuinti. Sordid. 'I‘hings to bring a lump in your throat or a sneer to X0111‘ depression has brought tragic, heroic. lips or lift your head with pride in humanity. For out the real mettle in us as fire tries out gold. One man wrote me that after years and Wits "i struggle and Fl-Yillllfi hard work he had risen to a place of power and accumulated a fortune. Almost in a. night his investments became ivortlilcss. He had taken cut after out in his salary until he was earning a mere pittance. In their prosperity rie and his wife rim iii-tried m apart. as rich husbands and wives are apt to do, he absorbed in business, she in society. Even their old love seemed dead. and Then came the crash, and standing amidst its ruins he contemplated suicide. His courage and hope were gone and he was lonely and desolate. Then came his wife to him, bracing up his fainting spirit with her own intrepid one. “What does all this matter?" she said. "We have still got all that counts. We have got each other. We started out with nothing and we had the tilnc of our lives building up together; and we will do it again and like it. You may have lost a. few dollars, but you've still got head and your energy, the tools with which you once carved your way to success, and you can do it again. So buck up and don't. be a quittcr." And getting my wife back," said the man, "and finding Out that she admired me as much as she ever did was worth all it cost me." your But not all wives are pure gold. Some are plnchbeek. And I have had many and many a heart-breaking letter from a husband who had slaved for years to give every luxury to a. wife who turned upon him with bitter reproaches and nagging that took the last ounce of courage out of him when he could no longer give her the money she craved. Sometimes in the queer upheaval of things that the financial earthquake has brought about, the man in a family has been unable to find employment, while the woman has got a job, and in many such cases the wife who has accepted her husband's support for years has grudged him the very bread he ate tvheu she became the family provider. One poor man wrote that his wife had bought herself six pairs of fancy shoes, but she wouldn't cvcn give him enough money to have his shoes half-soled. Many parents have written me that they considered that. the ‘de- pression had been a blessing in disguise, for it was the salvation of the younger generation who were hell-bent on having a good time and noth- ing else. Lacking the price, they have been forced to slow down and turn their energies into something more profitable than making whoopee. "I used to look at my children," said a man, "and think that they were about the most useless, selfish, eonscieneelcss, ivorthless set of young- sters that etjcr encumbered the earth, and I wondered what the country would come to if it fell into their hands. But when I lost my money and could not give them speed cars and Paris fincry and wads of spending money they didn't utter a whine. They simply laughed thc depression off v v v‘¢¢ Personal -:- Fa QQOO-O-GO-O-O-Q-OQ-O-OR OHOO-O-O-OO (jUARDIAN flowers and shrubs free from dis- case by selecting seeds, buds or scions from the perfect plants, by digging up and destroying by fire any plants that g0 ofl.’ or in any way iwqulre definite symptoms of dis- location and cultural practice for each variety of ornamental. Prac- tically any annual well illustrates the value of selection. In the ease of sweet peas, anthra- nose and streak diseases are prob- ably the most common. Both these diseases are transmitted through the seed. If the garden is reason- ably well isolated and seed is saved will seldom appear. By Seed Selection In the case of asters the most common disease ls aster wilt, caus- ed by a. Faisal-la fungus. Although disinfecting the seed with corrosive subllmate (R1000) will prevent the introduction of the wilt there are other diseases upon which the dis- infectant has no effect. Aster yel- lows caused by a virus ls a typical example. Only by selecting seed from healthy plants can yellows be controlled. . Careful selection of seed from healthy aster plants has a two- fold value. First, it prevents fungus spores froan being carried over on the seed, and secondly, fftends to eliminate the wilt susceptible forms. iLately, quite a number of vrilt re- sistant. aster varieties created by crossing and selecting have been listed by the leading seed houses. Aster yellow in common with nearly all important plant diseases ls infectious. Hence, if the diseased plants are discovered and removed soon enough the spread of disease is usually checked. In the case of "tulip fire" investigations show that early removal of diseased plants 1s of great importance. Cultural Methods Cultural methods are of import- ance. If bulbous iris are subjected to careless cultivation and rough ease and by discovering the ideal from perfect plant-a. these ‘lseases I18 ship AAAAA A‘ xx ’MAY 29. 1933 tare _ vvv v -:-.- Literq‘ vév v v e v ¢vv Daintiness With. Chic Styles ~- O ave '0 u 1...; u _ gmfririighow a GARDENING AMornmgSmile 51°05 Q chm-actu- ' Denrflslv“? o! PM" ‘ m l "False doctrine a when B. doctor , DISEASES 01-‘ ORNAMENTALS gives wrong stuff to a man." By W. Newton “A grass widow ls the wife of a - - - - ' . d Mm 1m, much vegetarian." The Spirit m Winch the Depression Has Been m: a51- mr f“! m mzmmental “m mo the Pilgrims armed the Pilgrim's Progress." "Hon, Sec. and Hon. Tress. means that they are supposed to be hon- est." “A cuckoo is the only British bird which does not lay its own eggs." “King Louis was absolutely self- scented." The amateur male-voice choir had been giving their first public por- formance at a village some miles from their native town, and a good number of their townspeople went in hear them. They had a poor xeceptlo until toward the finish. ‘Then every item was eneorcd. As they went out, the leader said t othe old steward by the exit: “Your people seemed to have appre- ciated us, by the encore: they gave us at the flnlsh." "Eh, but 0i ‘eered 'em saying they only enkored’ yer because it woz warmer in ‘ere than waitin’ on th’ station for th’ handling at harvest or in storage a large amount of the plants will be lost in bulb rot. In the case of violets, the leaf spot diseases an seldom seflous if the dead foliage is thoroughly cleared away from the plants early in the fall. The com- mon leaf spot disease of German lrls is markedly checked by clearing away the soil front the surface of the rhlozrnes so as to expose them to the sun, and by incorporating in the soil quite large amounts of lime. Although most varieties re- spond to this treat/merit there are a number of Qlons. ' Mkny diseases of rock plants can ocean, and this was known as "The , ILLUSTRATED DIIBSHAKING IIBQON FURNISHED ‘ WITH XVIII PATIBIN ' I! _ANNAIILII WOITIINGEII Whether you want a dress fq street, afternoons or office we“ here's your number. For town and ofllce wear, it look-i so smart and trim in. light navy mu, crepe silk. And it takes but 3y I749 THE cooks CORNER SANDWICH LOAF 1 loaf sandwich bread, ‘A cup but- be "BCf-‘d t0 9°01‘ drlihfltlv- T00 ter, creamed; l-hard-cooked eggs; much light or shade also plays a a teaspoons stuffed olives finely part in the health of many species chopped; 1% cups mayonnaise; 1 and varieties. Mecanopsls and a cup sardines, minced; 1-3 cup sweet ntunber of the prlmlllas will become pickles. clwimed: 1 tablespoon Pickle diseased if grown in a brlghtsunny 111169; dash of salt; watercress. location. on the contrary, edclweiss fllolmfid- and the woonyqeaged myme Wm Remove the crusts from bread and m» remain heauhy u grown 1n a cut 10B! lengthwise 111 IOU!‘ tfi-mch damp, shady position. Suiieb Th!‘ med‘ '- "'5' ‘bu? knife! Spread ‘the bottom slice with and made R flame of doing without things. They got what work they could do and they developed an amount of brains and energy I had never Suspected them of havlns. And they actually showed some affection and appreciation and gratitude to the old man." ‘Phat there should be fewer marriages in hard times is, of course, nat- ural. Prudence warnslthat even brides have to eat and men are afraid to undertake another mouth to feed when they don't know where they are going to get enough for their own. But a. and phase of the falling of! in marriaize 1s that so many young people, desperately in love with each other and seeing no prospect of getting enough money to buy a. wedding ring, are driven by their love-and longing into an illicit realitlonshlp, It is also understandable that there should be fewer divorces because, for one thing, divorces cost money, and for another, the depression has drawn many husbands and wives together and made them realize how dependent they were on each other, and because many women who had nothing to think about but their own emotions and whether their lins- bands were their real affinities or not, have had to go to work for the first time in years and been too busy 000111118 and. washing and ironing to think about the state of their hearts. And because Lady Loves come high and the lack of the price ls the beginning of virtue with men. And so our black cloud has had its silver lining, domestically speak- ing. DORUFHY DIX. eofrn/ollv m xknateeu tram-us g MARY Firvr ouo IAIIFRN Kfi- i’?! 3v KATHLEEN NO. RIS "No, I'm not, (itirling. This is just. Q restaurant, like any other, and you'll find the food isn't. as good as your own cooking- The young lady will leave her coal, too, please. bcbcau, Mr. hlcrrills trilile, please." They were in the liuuds of the bowing, obscquious hcatlwailcr. Ma‘;- gie did not. hold Joes hanii, bu. she kept, her frightrncd little person closein the shadow of his as they entered the warmth and intimacy and beauty of the Legend Room. White tables, at all of which were diners, brilliant big lights far over- head, and little lights on the tables, women whose shoulders were bare and whose hair was moulded izito close caps of curls, jewels and voices and perfumes and flowers and soft muslc-lt was all a wild whirl to her stunned senses. Her shabby lit- tle shoes, her plain little gown mov- ed beside Joe blindly. She heard him say: "My mother, Maggie." She saw a steel-bright, handsome face looking at her under beautiful scal- lops of feathered hair set with a jcwelled nlgrettc. Slic muririiin-d: "Pleased to meet ju," and sank diz- ully lnto a seat. ' Mn. Merrill! liandsoizie‘ (yes flashed with a malicious satisfac- tion. She had hoped, in her some- what twisted conception of motherly loyalty, that Joe's girl would not make much of a showing to-night. But shc had hardly dared hope for a conquest quite so overwhelming and immediate. "We took the liberty of ordering, Miss Johnson," she said smoothly, “although rxnhapa etiquette might have hinted that we waitr Joo eyed his mother-shut his jaw hard. But Maggie looked up, and he saw with a sort of delighted terror that shc had been angered into self-control, "I thought you knew," shc said clearly, "that I don't. know anything about etiquette! Arc you-" she pur- sued evenly, turning to Joe's father- “are you G. J. Merrill of the Stores?" "I am, my dear," said George Merrill kindly, feeling sorry for the bewildered little thing. Maggie grew very white and sat back slightly in her chair. “Joe never told men! didn't know lt," she sultl in a lifeless little ioicc, "But now that you do know lt- and I ought to have told you long "Water to Miss Johnson," Mrs. ggqgnd I'm 11 fool!" Jug 551d quick- Merrill Skid, annoyed. It WES the ly, uncomfortably, "-it doesn't, Walter's business to see that the make onc itrap of difiiireuce, does 811F995 211155 W115 filled. hilt Mrs. it?" Merrill felt lllugiculiy irritated with shc raised h” “yes to his’ mere’ the guest who had hurl to ezill utteri- was a Second o, Silmum tion to the omission. “Not. at all," shc answered them, “And a fork’ "lease", Maggie add‘ quietly. m‘ She said lt so low, with such eni- barrassmcnt, that nobody liczird it. “And a. fork, please," Maggie rc- peated, audlbly now. “A fork for my fish," shc said, clearing her throat. “And n. fork- while you're up." "While you're up!" Mrs. Merrilfs lips twitchctl, as if unwillingly Her sardonic, triumphant glance, as it mct Joe's wretched, defiant gaze, ex- pressed a certain reluctance to laugh at his unfortunate little humble friend, but an inability to resist the tremendous temptation. In such a situation as this to- night she could score. Notvery clev- cr, not really a gcntlcwoman, she was still enough of each to snub and suppress Maggie Johnson. ‘jcyed the chance. CHAPTER XI. Quiet! He had never seen lier so quiet. She had conquered hcr first suffocating rush of shyness, shc was sitting erect, and when he or his mother or father spoke, she ans- wercd. Hcr look told him that he had be- trayed her, delivered her, bound and helpless, to her enemies. "1 trusted you-—I loved you when you were a shabby, dirty errand clerk, beside me in a cheap store," said Maggie's eyes, "and all the time you were my employer's son, ready to make fun of me, ready to shame me -—when your moment came!" She helped herself, awkwardly, unfamlllarly, to food, when it was him very much, to feel a strange loyalty and admiration for her com- moner. His indifference to her fam- ily's ideals and opinions was-well, simply breathtaking! Eratitude. My son Joe, here, seems to have gotten a. lot. more out of it than he ever did out; of collegel" Maggie looked at him unemotlon- ally In the more than twenty years of "Ho did!" do very we“ mom f“ their marriage, George Merrill had changed her, somewhat. He was a. good, simple fellow, amazed at his own success, proud of his wife, ad- oring his boy. It was at about this time, when by her brightened eyes and nervous voice, and by the two scarlet spots that blazed in her checks, Maggie began to show the effects of the sur- prise and the strain, that George Merrill suddenly took a hand in the conversation. He had been an almost silent spectator, so far, watching his wife and his son shrewdly, sending an occasional glance toward the girl. larcatlr-"very well. him." "I’m proud to hear it," George Merrill said thankfully, ('I‘o Be Continued) Study "You work in the Stores, Miss bu}, Johnson?" ' "In Number Seven—on Eighth. __' Yes, sir." "W Thin" "How long have you been there? awhile," shc admitted quietly, "but now he is doing very well-good-" she changed it again, under her They all like T110“! 15 no business, no avoca- tlon whatever, which will _not per- mit a man who has im inclination, to glvc a. little time every day to the studies of his youth-Wythen. She en- To feel herself You don't look old enough to have been there very long?" presented at her left elbow on the big platters. But he noted with a real pang of shame and concern that she hardly touched ‘it. "Would you ask the nclp if I could have some water?" she said once. And Mrs. Merrill said quite audlbly, if in an aside, "Oh, priceless!" Joe looked down, his face dark. "Mother—-—" he murmured, chok- lng. A faint smile touched the older woman's painted mouth. and she real satisfaction. She had been, as a girl, of iha miserable and superfluous known as shabby genteel. eager, beautiful, hungry. 58.14 lraclnullyl “I Ml DIIdOIIT." lthls‘ girl's superior, to cut her easily and carelessly in a boned, beautiful, cultivated voice gave Lillian Merrill class At twenty-five, Lillian was sharp, She fell upon George Merrill with avidity; he was a commoner, but lie was rich. He was the first real man she had ever met, and to her own nlfprigc and confusion she had coma to like 'I‘he kind, deliberate voice stead- ied her. She breathed easier, looked him ln the eye. "I'm eighteen. I went in nearly i four Years are, when 1 finished Grammar. My father and mother had-considerable trouble." "Your father's living, than?" "My father's a postman.” George Merrill flushed with gen- uine concern; he had been trying to put her at her ease. "Well," he said pleasantly, "I lhlnklowothotltcrlodobhof --- "UHWYiQ-lfiiyqd/Jqtig . . Put these five things on your five finger-tips: To sec, to think, to love, to believe, to work, The“ are the things that give you a grip on life. A6"!!! on BOTH upper and lower bowel,‘ the German remedy Adlerlkn. 1MP! nstlpatlon. It brings out the Poisons which cause gas bloating and!‘ bad slew. Hulhu Dru: 00.. Ho“. German packet of "sauna" Tea m show. Treatment Stops Faith Cgnstipation Give ms my scallop-shell of quiet, butter, then spread evenly ififi mix- ture made by combining mashed egg yolks, chopped egg whites, olives and ‘.4 cup mayonnaise. SAEDINES AND PICKLES Cover the second slice of bread, buttered on both sides, with mixture made by combining sardines, sweet pickles, pickle juice and $4 cup mayonnaise and salt. Cover the third slice, buttered on both sides, with the chopped water- cress and a little mayonnaise. The fourth slice of bread gets buttered only on the under side and finish the top of the loaf. < When ‘the loaf is done, loe it on top and sides with mayonnaise. Unique Gift To Housewives 0f Charlottetown HUNDREDS OI‘ DOLLARS TO BE GIVEN AWAY 1N CASH During the next two weeks, sev- eral hundreds of dollars will be dis- tributcd in this City by the Sulada Tea. Company, a. Montreal firm, packers of the oldest established and largest selling packet. ten ln Can- ada-"SALADA". Tho “SALADA" man is now ln town t0 perform that pleasing function. t The “SALADM man's conversa- tion in our offices made it clear that he is going to call every day on a large number of homes, selected at random, and in every instance where the housewife shows him a packet of "SALADA" Tea, either pound or half-pound size, she will be given a crisp new One Dollar Bill. 0f course, some Charlottetown families have not yet tried “SAL- ADA" Tea-but hundreds have used lt for years, and many more will buy their packet of "SALADA" right away, so that, lf the "SALADA" man calls, they will receive the dol- lar award. This distribution of money by Salads Tea Company will be par= tlcularly welcome to readers of our paper, for it will be distributed to a large number of people at random, without any attempt at selection of particular homes, thus giving every- one equal chance who has the My staff of faith to walk upon, My scrip of joy, immortal diet, My Bottle of salvation. My crown of glory, hope’: true gage, And thus I'll take my pilgrimage. yards o! 39-inch material for ti“ 36-inch bust. Prints ln crepe silk in blue and white or in red and white are stun. um: too. Flor afternoons, grey or beige cup, silk is especially nice. Note the chic sleeve detail to glvg the fashionable wider shoulder line. And the bias seaming that ma)“; the bodice "fitlng." It's a. very simple model to make. ‘There are so few major parts to m, pattern. Style No. ‘I49 is designed for size; 14, 16, 18, 2O years, 38, 38, 40 and u inches bust. Price of PATIERN l5 cents in stamps or coin (coin is Preferredi. Wrap coin carefully. ' No, ‘I40. Btu . . ....... Street Address . . . . . City Stats, 1f you wish a beautiful sheet oi transfer embroidery containing over 60 designs, send 15 cents additional for pattern No.‘2350. l-‘or Expectant Mothers Thou Who Need Strength London, Ont. - “My health failed before my little girl was born, I felt I had not the least bit of strength, was l0 weak I was not able to do_anything, had pains m my back and _ head, some days my feet would swell and I had many rest- lul nights," so I Mrs. G. Good: of 241! Ottsway Ave. " took Dr. Pierce’: Fami Prescription and have never forgotten wit?! did for m2. It put me in good ghynl ‘ condition, I had no trouble and lu a v healthy baby." Sold by all drugglsts. Wrlu In Dr. Plan's Cllnlr, Bahia; N. Y" for Inc Indhnl udvln. MORTGAGE SALE 'l‘o he sold by public auction h front: of the Law Courts Building ii lhnrlottctuwn on ‘Tuesday the slrtb d"! of Juno A. D. 1033, n! the honi- ct “W!” "TIMI! ""9". rill that tract of land situate lying and helug on Township Nunihor Sixty 1|, Qunpng Lounty aforesaid bouudcil nnil des- cribed as follows, that in to sni, (mmmmwiflfl nt a stake fixcil at iiio "°""l°"" nmzlc of lunii owned by John lifcPhci-snu formerly liunuin Iilrlicnn nml ln the North sldn of tlis r lifaltlnnil Road, thence north along the eastern lmunilnry line of Jrihn McPherson‘: lnnd to tho division liiis lfifin between 'l‘owuslilpx Numbers Jitlit nuil Sixty, thence east along until division line for the distance of alx chains and sixty-six links, thence "Y"!!! M] ll lino parallel to John Mc- lhernons east boundary lino to tht lilnltlanil Rom] aforesaid, thence. west "iimli anlrl Road to thc pint": of com- menircmeitr, reserving thereon! auil ‘hcrefroiu tho dwelling house lriil tfmm"! WWUIM‘ with three acres o! timd- “"1": and containing forty- ‘ITO acres of lnnil n little. more in ‘"5. "Brother with n rlnlit of way on ho north alilo of the lillll Piuiil. , a anso n" uiiit piii-eei of lflnil IHIIM "ll Imt oi- {Pnwnablp Number Show’ i" Queens County hounded nnd des- cribed as follows: by u lino Cflllllllrlll" l": at fl stake let iii tiic IIOIU! lilil! of the lifnltliinil lliirul niul ln trio Southwest tingle of lulul in the I'll!" neanlnurof Jolm lilvllonalil nml runn- “W ‘helm! (Ivy the tnuguetlc iui-reiilan "f "I" rm 11m) North to u» divis- ion lino between amid Tnwvisiliip nml T°“'"!hil\ Number l-‘ifLv-ongiii, "m"? ‘Wt nloiu: siiiii l"\'|.\il\ll lino nix chains nml alxtywalx links nr l0 1m“! 1" Possession o! John MCLNH), thence aoufli to the lloml aforesaid nnrl thence curt ulong the same to ""5 Ilillvc of CUIIHIIPHPPIIVWII. ciinlrilii- "u: forty-eight iiei-cii of iiiiiii ll mm more or lean agreeably to tlin [lion o! the name ln tho mnrgln of tlue con- Vfynnco from tho Commissioner f‘! lubllc. Ilnniln to Jnines McLean dai- Od Hill (Ir-tuber, 1801 ALbQ nil that other tract on 'l‘nii-n- Phiil l\llllI|H‘I‘ Silly nfnroanlil lmunil- ed nnil dent-allied m1 follows, that. is to ""32 (‘iimiueiicltig at i1 fllflkn In the north sltlr- of tlir- Miililmul lfond and In the south oust angle o! the nor- lhoru portion of Iunil fnrnlerly rovi- \"'.\‘ml to John llfclflunon nnil runriliill them-c north along tho mild boundary lino of snicl lnml to llic illvlllnn livin between ‘Townships Fifty-right. mill Sui". "Hume east ulouu said illriain" lino [I'll t-linlus nr i0 tho wont bonu- "IITY of lnnil now or formerly Iiolleaolnu of‘ Imncnn McLean, tlir-nrl 11°"! Hnlil line south to tho ltonti nforennlil niul thence West ten chain! along niilil ltnnil to tho place nf coni- lncncctncut ciinlnlnlitg nu nrcn levenLv-tu-o ncreu n llttlo more "P long excepting there-nut one-eighth "P" Rrnntcil to thr- Trustees o! Nchonl District No. 1:3 m, 1n pan-in? ha‘ 1000, and registered February 47 The above sale l: mnile tinder an h! virtue of n power of laln cnntalvifli In 1m llnlculurc of Mortgngn rliii"'| lfllh dny ol‘ April A, I), 1023, mmll between lain-en McKInnnn of Lou-u. Township ti" in Queen's County, in Prlincn Edward Inland, Farmer urlfl Margaret Mt-Rlunnn his wire, of ti" rim pin-r, iiim cattieriiiii McLeod v! Alnnfngtic In King‘! County in mild lllnmL Single Woman. (nines dart-fl" d) of tho second purl, default hnvllll been mails in payment n! Hie ruonll" lecnred by the uld mortgage. For particulars lpply to lit-Leo! and Bentley, Bolieltcrs, Charlottetown!- Dnted thin 0th day of April 191'); \\'lIiLIA.\l E. DENTI- ALBRT J. D. MART l“ Ixecutorl utate of Into Clfllfl‘ i.- -8lrWoltor numb. .-1r‘-.i~<i<-~i - llcfohd. Em I III I